You are hereBorn to Dance
Born to Dance
Director: Roy Del Ruth Writers: Jack McGowan (VI), Sid Silvers, Buddy G. DeSylva, Jack McGowan (VI), Sid Silvers
Runtime: 106
Color: Black and White
![]() | Eleanor Powell (I) | Nora Paige |
| James Stewart (I) | Ted Barker | |
![]() | Virginia Bruce | Lucy James |
![]() | Una Merkel | Jenny Saks |
![]() | Sid Silvers | 'Gunny' Sacks |
![]() | Frances Langford | 'Peppy' Turner |
![]() | Raymond Walburn | Captain Percival Dingby |
![]() | Alan Dinehart (I) | James 'Mac' McKay |
| Buddy Ebsen | 'Mush' Tracy | |
![]() | Juanita Quigley | Sally Saks |
![]() | Georges (I) | Himself, Dance Speciality (as Georges and Jalna) |
![]() | Jalna | Herself, Dance Specialty (as Georges and Jalna) |
![]() | Reginald Gardiner | Central Park Policeman |
![]() | Barnett Parker | Model Home Demonstrator |
![]() | The Foursome | Sailor Quartette |
![]() | J. Marshall Smith | Member of The Foursome |
![]() | L. Dwight Snyder | Member of The Foursome |
![]() | Jay Johnson (I) | Member of The Foursome (as Ray Johnson) |
![]() | Del Porter | Member of The Foursome |
![]() | Barbara Bedford | Hector's Secretary (uncredited) |
![]() | Charles Bennett (II) | Quartet member (uncredited) |
![]() | Joseph Bjorndahl | Solo bit in "Entrance of Lucy James" number (uncredited) |
![]() | Anita Brown (I) | Anita, Lucy's maid (uncredited) |
![]() | Charles Coleman (I) | Club Continental Waiter (uncredited) |
![]() | Eddie Constantine | Extra (uncredited) |
![]() | Jacqueline Daix | Chorine (uncredited) |
![]() | Mary Dees | Chorine (uncredited) |
![]() | Gay DeLys | Chorine (uncredited) |
![]() | Ernie Feutz | Quartet member (uncredited) |
![]() | James Flavin | Ship's officer (uncredited) |
![]() | Otto Fries | Quartet member (uncredited) |
![]() | Wesley Giraud | Newsboy (uncredited) |
| Peter Gowland | Dancer (uncredited) | |
![]() | Jonathan Hale (I) | Hector, the columnist (uncredited) |
![]() | Sherry Hall | Cameraman (uncredited) |
![]() | Maynard Holmes | Lonely Hearts Patron drinking soda (uncredited) |
![]() | David Horsley (III) | Sailor (uncredited) |
![]() | Shep Houghton | Dancer (uncredited) |
![]() | Jean Joyce | Chorine (uncredited) |
![]() | Leona Keene | Acrobat (uncredited) |
![]() | Naomi Keene | Acrobat (uncredited) |
![]() | John Kelly (I) | Recruiting officer (uncredited) |
![]() | George King (I) | Assistant stage manager (uncredited) |
![]() | Ralph Leon (I) | Solo bit in "Entrance of Lucy James" number (uncredited) |
![]() | Wally Maher | Reporter (uncredited) |
![]() | Joe Mandel | Acrobat (uncredited) |
![]() | William Mandel | Acrobat (uncredited) |
![]() | Douglas McPhail | Solo bit in "Entrance of Lucy James" number (uncredited) |
![]() | Norman Nielson | Solo bit in "Entrance of Lucy James" number (uncredited) |
![]() | Dennis O'Keefe (I) | Lonely Hearts Patron with girl on couch (uncredited) |
![]() | Franklin Parker | Reporter (uncredited) |
![]() | Gus Reed | Quartet member (uncredited) |
![]() | Geraldine Robertson | Chorine (uncredited) |
![]() | Harry Strang | Sailor (uncredited) |
![]() | Charles Trowbridge | Model Home Spokesman (uncredited) |
![]() | Helen Troy | McKay's telephone operator (uncredited) |
![]() | John Tyrrell (II) | Reporter (uncredited) |
![]() | Allan Watson | Solo bit in "Entrance of Lucy James" number (uncredited) |
![]() | Bobby Watson (I) | Costume designer and assistant stage manager (uncredited) |
![]() | Ginger Wyatt | Chorine (uncredited) |
Sailor Ted meets at the Lonely Hearts Club of his friend Gunny's wife, Jenny, a girl, Nora Paige, and falls in love. Nora wants to become a dancer on Broadway. Ted rescues the Pekinese of Lucy James, a Broadway star during a public relations campaign on his submarine. Lucy falls in love with Ted, and Ted is ordered by his Captain to meet her in a night club, in spite of the fact that he has a date with Nora. Nora, who lives with Jenny and her and Gunny's daughter, doesn't want to hear anything from Ted, after she spotted a picture of Ted and Lucy in the morning paper. Lucy convinces her manager Dinehart to stop the press campaign and tells him that she would leave the production, if another photo or article of her and Ted is published. Nora has become her understudy, and she begins to think her behaviour to Ted over. Suddenly she is fired after Dinehart told her to dance a number Lucy James called undanceable. But when Ted is told the whole story, he knows what to do.
- 1936
- actress
- central-park-new-york
- child
- Comedy
- dance
- dancer
- dog
- empire-state-building-new-york
- employment-dismissal
- English
- fishing
- george-washington-bridge
- hotel
- jump-from-height
- marriage
- Musical
- new-york-city
- nightclub
- pig-latin
- publicity
- reporter
- rescue
- romantic-rivalry
- ruse
- sailor
- ship
- shore-leave
- show-business
- singer
- statue-of-liberty
- submarine
- theatrical-producer
- u-boat
- us-navy
- USA




















